San Diego jury awards woman $186 million in bias case against AutoZone

The entrance to an AutoZone store is pictured in Temple City, California December 10, 2013. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

By Marty Graham SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - A federal jury in California awarded nearly $186 million to a San Diego area woman who sued AutoZone Inc. saying she was demoted and fired after being told pregnant women can't do the job of managing a store, court records showed. The award on Monday by a six-person jury, which follows a two-week trial, includes $872,720 in compensatory damages and another $185 million in punitive damages for plaintiff Rosario Juarez, 43. "We were able to prove that AutoZone engaged in rather extraordinary discrimination against Ms. Juarez," said attorney Charles Moore, who is part of the legal team representing her. Representatives for the auto parts retailer did not immediately respond to requests for comment by phone and email. But company spokesman Ray Pohlman told the San Diego Union Tribune that the company intends to appeal. According to the complaint, Juarez was hired by AutoZone in 2000 as a customer service representative at a store south of San Diego. In April 2001, she was promoted to parts sales manager and in October 2004 to store manager. Then in September 2005, Juarez became pregnant with the first of her two children. The district manager told her she could not handle the demands of the job and urged her to return to parts sales throughout her pregnancy, the complaint said. After her son was born, Juarez was demoted and took a pay cut. After she waited the required year from the demotion to seek her former job, the district manager refused to promote her, and she was terminated in 2008, the complaint said. By then, she had filed claims with the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing, the complaint added. At trial, a former district manager testified that an AutoZone vice president berated him for having so many women in management positions, saying: "What are we running here, a boutique? Get rid of those women." The jury ruled that the harassment against Juarez was "severe and pervasive," and found unanimously that she was discriminated against and later fired because of her pregnancy, according to the verdict form. (The story corrects to remove remarks from lawyer who is no longer trial counsel in case, replaces with remark from current counsel, paragraphs 1-3.) (Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Sandra Maler)